Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Fitch affirms Sunshine Holdings at ‘Aa+(lka)’; Outlook Stable

-

Fitch Ratings announced it has affirmed Sunshine Holdings PLC’S National Long-term Rating at ‘Aa+(lka)’. The Outlook is Stable.

Sunshine’s rating reflects its steady business profile, which is anchored by defensive cashflows in its healthcare manufactur­ing and retail and consumer segments, and its strong balance sheet.

“This counterbal­ances weaknesses in its agricultur­e segment (16 percent of EBIT) over the next 12-18 months amid moderating palm oil prices,” the rating agency said.

Sunshine’s rating is constraine­d by its smaller operating scale and modest market positions in its core businesses compared to higher-rated peers.

Fitch expects EBITDA net leverage to remain at below 1.0x in FY25-FY26 (financial year ending March), which is comfortabl­y below the 4.0x level above which we would consider negative rating action.

“We expect a limited drag on leverage from softer EBITDA margins and higher capex. We expect Sunshine’s margins to moderate to around 13.5 percent from

FY25 (FY24: 15.5 percent) as it is not able to fully pass on increased wages, and the higher costs of inputs and electricit­y in the healthcare and consumer segments, due to consumer sentiment remaining weak.

EBITDA interest coverage is solid, and forecast at 6.8x in FY25 (FY24: 22.3x), in line with lower market interest rates as domestic inflation eases amid abating risks from Sri Lanka’s economic challenges in the last 18-24 months. healthcare is expected to lead growth with Fitch forecastin­g a 13 percent revenue growth in Sunshine’s healthcare segment, following the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n’s (IFC) Rs. 3.27 billion investment for a 14.7 percent stake in subsidiary Sunshine Healthcare Lanka Limited (SHL) in May 2024.

Growth in the consumer segment is likely to remain muted at around 2 percent in the next 12-18 months because consumer spending will be pressured by significan­t direct and indirect tax hikes on disposable income. Fitch expects Sri Lanka’s GDP to expand in the low single-digits in the next two years, which could support consumer sentiment. meanwhile, palm oil segment’s EBITDA is expected to fall to Rs. 2.5 billion in FY25 (FY24: Rs.3.0 billion) as Fitch forecasts benchmark global crude palm oil (CPO) prices soften to US$ 775 per tonne in 2024 and US$ 700 in 2025.

“This is because we expect a resumption of La Nina weather patterns in 2H24 to drive higher palm oil production, which will be exacerbate­d by Sunshine’s higher domestic production costs from increased wages,” the rating agency said. Further, the agency said Sunshine has significan­t headroom under its current rating sensitivit­ies to engage in M&A, if required. The company has a record of focusing on large acquisitio­ns to raise the group’s overall profile instead of small-scale projects, but these have been managed prudently and conservati­vely funded. However, a larger than expected debt-funded acquisitio­n could pressure its rating.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka